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Lee turned around
and issued General Order No. 9 on January 22, 1864, saying that he understood
everyone was hungry, and he was doing everything in his power to increase
rations. Then came the pep talk: “Soldiers! You tread with no unequal step the
road by which your fathers marched through suffering, privations, and blood, to
independence. Continue to imitate in the future, as you have in the past, their
valor in arms, their patient endurance of hardships, their resolve to be free,
which no trial could shake, no bribe seduce, no danger appall; and be assured
that the just God who rewarded their efforts with success will in His own good
time send down His blessings upon yours.” (Official Records 33, 1117)
But what about that
letter? Did some private in the ranks actually write Lee, saying they were hungry?
Maybe… On January 24, 1864, Samuel Pickens, 5th Alabama Infantry, possibly
gives us a glimpse of this very story in his diary. An order of thanks from the
Confederate Congress was read at dress parade that day, along with a
communication from Lee. The latter said that “a man in this Brig. Sent him an anonymous
letter with a slice of beef which he said was a days ration for 3 men and
asking Gen to keep it till it grew to the proper size… Gen. Battle expressed
deep mortification at its being in his Brig. It was evidently some poor dissatisfied
fellow.” (Hubbs, Voices from Company D, 213)
Brigadier General
Cullen A Battle’s brigade was composed of five Alabama regiments: 3rd,
5th, 6th, 12th, and 26th Alabama
Infantry. We’ll probably never know just who sent the letter, but at least we
can narrow it down.
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